
Abdul Barik
Bio
Stories (146)
Filter by community
Ibrahim's willpower
Ibrahim was an ordinary young man, the son of an ordinary family. After completing his Hifz in a mediocre madrasa in the city, he enrolled in an Islamic university. There were no dramatic changes in his life, no revolutions, but rather his soul was developed through small daily struggles. And in the midst of this daily struggle, one day Ibrahim found a glow within himself that gradually turned him into an indomitable warrior.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Writers
Women's hijab
“Is the hijab requirement for women in Islam—is it derogatory?” This is a question that is often discussed in modern times, especially in the context of the feminist movement, Western human rights philosophy, and secularism. The usual complaint from atheists and non-Muslims is—“Islam forces women to cover their bodies, which is a kind of attack on women’s freedom and individuality. Why does Islam always require women to cover their bodies, not men? Isn’t this discriminatory against women?” To find the answer to this question, we need to go deeper into our Islamic beliefs—why Islam has given such a requirement, and whether it is derogatory at all.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Writers
The path of Ibn Qasim
His name was Ibn Qasim. But no one knew him by that name. On the battlefield he was ‘Al-Mutawakkil’, in the prison camp ‘Abu Hamza’, and on the path of migration he was known as ‘Al-Gharib’. Because his true identity was one—he was a destitute dreamer of Allah, who came to change this world with the fire of sacrifice and faith.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Motivation
Al-Nur City
The year is 2147. The world is no longer the same. The impact of climate change has swallowed up the coasts, many cities have been wiped off the map. Western hegemony has collapsed into internal civil war and economic bankruptcy. The old era of the United Nations, the World Bank, or the American dollar is only in the pages of history. But at that time, a new civilization has emerged in the heart of the desert—the city of Al-Nur.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Motivation
Tamanna
There were no stars in the sky of Baghdad that night. There was no hope in the air, only the smell of smoke and gunpowder. The war drums were far away, but the sound reverberated like waves through the streets of the city. The sound of Surah Yasin floated from the dome of the mosque, and nearby stood some shadowy figures holding guns. Among those shadows was one—the girl—whose name no one knew, no one uttered, but secretly everyone led in prayer. Her name was Tamanna.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Motivation
Story Name: Sailor
I am Saeed ibn al-Harith. No one knows me. History has not written me down, my name is not engraved in any palace, and I am not in any genealogy. But I was a sea-madman, a lover of the waters, a sailor whose heart sought the power of God in the roar of the waves.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Motivation
The mask of US human rightsism.
The Mask of US Human Rights: A History of the Empire of Oppression When the slogans of human rights, democracy or justice are spread on the world stage, the United States is the first. ‘Freedom’, ‘Liberty’, ‘Human Rights’—these words are like a miraculous mantra in their mouths. They have captured the world media, the UN arena, the highest levels of education and culture, and even the definition of human rights, binding them to their dominance. But the question is, is the United States really the protector of human rights? Or have they made human rights a political weapon, using which they have destroyed the foundations of nations, civilizations and humanity?
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in History
Reasons for the decline of the Muslim world.
The Muslim world was once a symbol of leadership in the pages of world history—unique in knowledge, science, justice, military might, and spirituality. Baghdad, Cairo, Andalusia, Samarkand, or Delhi—each city was a beacon of civilization. But today that Muslim world is fragmented, weak, oppressed, and confused. The question arises—what is the cause of this decline? Is it primarily the result of external aggression? Or is it the result of internal moral and political weakness?
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in History
Story name: “Al-Asifah” (The Storm).
The night is deep. The snow-capped peaks of the Sierra Nevada stand still, looking up at the stars in the sky. The wind blows in the valley like a gentle breath, but in that breath today there are terrible tears hidden. Because tonight, tonight is the night—when a civilization will be extinguished, when a dream called Andalusia will be buried forever.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Writers
Story Name: “Amanah”
The sky of Medina was calm, only the shadows of the leaves of the trees were in the air. Although everything was silent, a middle-aged woman pushed open the door of a small house. Her eyes were deep, her face was full of worry. Her feet were covered in dusty slippers, her hands were clasped in a handkerchief. Her name was Khawla—Khawla bint Aslam, who later became known to history as Khawla bint Azam. Her life story is like a chapter of courage burned in a burning fire, a courage that no man could do in that era.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Writers
Story name: “Ahad... Ahad...”
The night was deep, the sky of Mecca was filled with darkness. Silence was all around, as if nature itself was trembling with the arrival of some unknown truth. In the last hours of that night, a young black man was lying on a mud bed in a small hut, his eyes closed in silence. His name was Bilal—a slave brought from Abyssinia, who had no land, no inheritance, and not even his own life.
By Abdul Barik8 months ago in Writers











